Calflora only has geographic and ecological distribution information on vascular plants that are native (indigenous)
or naturalized (growing, reproducing and persisting in the wild without
human intervention) to the political borders of California. Calflora DOES
NOT contain information on plants that are growing with human intervention
(generally: being watered, sheltered or cared for in some way) These include
plants in gardens, manicured parks, or strictly agricultural weeds. If the plant you are looking
for is not native or naturalized in California, it will not be in Calflora.
This includes plants such as tulips, daffodils, rosemary, lemon trees, or any strictly horticultural plant growing in California.
You may also have a mis-spelling or spelling variation of the plant's name
(see the section on Common
Names below.)

Q: Can you give me more information about a particular California plant?

All the information available through Calflora and the CalPhotos
collection is available on the web. So your search results represent everything
that we have available to the public. We do not have a physical
library of information to refer to or experts available for public services.
Our research primarily concerns the
use of already-digitized botanical information, including images, location,
and collection information. Calflora does not currently contain information
on medicinal, ethnobotanical, horticultural, physiological,
or economic topics.

We send out an email of changes and updates to the Calflora
and CalPhotos web pages occasionally, as
changes dictate. If you would like to be on the mailing list
for these announcements, please email us here:
CONTACT
with your request and email address.

Q: How can I grow California Poppies? (or some other plant)

Neither Calflora nor the CalPhotos collection currently have information
on horticulture or growing California native plants. There are many, many
other sources of information for growing California native plants (mostly
books). You may wish to consult a gardening book such as Sunset Western
Garden Book
or the California Native Plant Society
Booksales.

Other online horticultural information for native plants
is sometimes available on
CNPLX.
From the bottom of a Calflora Taxon Report page
(for instance, the page for
Arctostaphylos bakeri),
try clicking through to the
CNPLX page for the same plant -- in this case, there are
several entries from native nurseries about how to grow
this plant.

Q: I have this plant; can you tell me what it is?

Trying to figure out what a plant is based on an email description is
very difficult. Some plant species can only be told apart (reliably)
by nearly microscopic details. If you seriously want to get a plant identified,
there are several places you can try.

Q: I am looking for a plant by the common name of ...? or do you know
a common name for this plant?

Common names, unlike scientific names, are not regulated or managed by
any one body. Thus, many common names are idiosyncratic. There are many
common names that are:

identical, but refer to different plants...

different, but refer to the same plant...

used frequently in one location, but have never been heard of just a few
miles away...

and some plants simply do not have any common name.

Calflora has collected common names from some major sources,
but it is nearly impossible to collect all the common names that exist
for all California plants. If you can not find a plant by common name that
you are sure is in California, you will probably need to find out the scientific
name for it first, then try searching Calflora.
We hope in the near future to standardize the common names we do have.
(according to guidelines such as
Common Names for Vascular Plants: Guidelines for use and application
Kartesz & Thieret, Sida 14(3):421-434. 1991.)
Scientific Names can be translated using the experimental
California Plant Synonymy table.

Q: I think there is an error in the Calflora occurrence database. Who
should I contact to correct it?

The occurrence database is collection of information from many different
sources.
In a real library, you generally wouldn't report an error
in a book to the librarian -- you would report the error to the author
or editor, and they might fix it in the next edition.
Following this model,
when you found an error in the Calflora observation database,
you would let the source institution or individual
know about the error, and then they would fix it online or
send Calflora a corrected copy.

In the actual situation, however, people are busy, and (with good reason)
do not want their email addresses in plain view on
the Calflora website.
So, if you see an error, please contact us here:
CONTACT
and we will do our best to contact the source and respond.

Q: How do I find all of the plants that grow wild in
my county?

There are several ways to ask for all of the wild
plants in a county. The examples below all concern
Marin Co., but the same query techniques can be
applied to any other county.

The simplest approach is to use the
Search for Plants page,
and choose the county name. Here is the result without
photos and grouped by family:

On this page you can choose what documentation types
you want to see. Marin Plants C above includes all documentation types.
Here is the same query showing only observations whose
documentation type is 'specimen', 'documented', or 'reported'
(not 'literature'):

Choosing a
reference authority (how synonyms are resolved)
also has an effect on the apparent number of plants.
Marin Plants C above was done with respect to current names
and synonyms from ICPN, XWALK, and CNPS,
and was therefore missing any synonyms that are only available
from USDA PLANTS. Here is the same query, but with
the reference authority set to ALL (which includes
USDA PLANTS):

The graphical approach: use
What Grows Here?, get the county boundaries lined up roughly inside
the map, and ask for all plants.
This search will only consider observations which are georeferenced.
Here is the result without photos and grouped by family,
including part of Sonoma Co.,
and where there are at least two records of each plant:

Please reference all photographs, documents, or database information that you use within your document.
For general references that refer to aggregated information in Calflora,
this is the suggested citaion format:

EXAMPLE 1: General Reference

Calflora: Information on California plants for education, research and conservation.

Calflora is a library of
information from other sources.
Therefore, when you cite specific information found on a Calflora webpage,
whenever possible please include a reference to the actual source of the information.
This is particularly relevant to observation data,
so that the people and institutions who did the work get the credit.

EXAMPLE 2: Specific Reference including sources of observation data

Calflora: Information on California plants for education, research and conservation.

The date of access is important, since the database changes.
Including the exact URL will enable readers to duplicate the query.
If photos are part of what you are citing,
please include the photographer's name and copyright.

Q: Where can I find a source for California plants, seeds, etc?

If you are looking for sources for garden material,
nursery availability for some California native plants
is available on
CNPLX.
From the bottom of a Calflora Taxon Report page
(for instance, the page for
Arctostaphylos bakeri),
try clicking through to the
CNPLX page for the same plant -- in this case, there are
about fifteen nurseries all over the state that sell this plant.

Your local CNPS chapter may have a fall or spring plant sale --
a CNPS plant sale can be an excellent opportunity to
get locally appropriate plants and meet other native gardeners.

Also, your local nursery
can order many California native plants from their suppliers. There are
also many specialty mail-order seed and plant catalogs for California native
plants. Check out some of the collected lists for gardening supplies for
sources. (such as the
Internet
directory for botany)

If you are looking for sources for material for botanical study
and experiments, you will probably want to contact one of California's
many Botanical Gardens or Herbaria, who can help you locate live material
and file the appropriate permits for collection of wild material. A list
of Californian botanical gardens is available from the American
Association of Botanical Gardens and Arboreta. Herbaria can be located
through Index Herbariorum
(enter CA for state)

Q: What
is the relationship of Calflora to CalPhotos?

Calflora is an independantly funded and run non-profit organization
dedicated to providing information about California wild plants
in useful forms to the public. Calflora partners with individuals,
organizations, and agencies to further this mission. The Berkeley
Digital Library Project is a research project in the Computer
Science Division of UC Berkeley, and has for several years used
environmental information as a testbed for developing new computer
science technologies. Together, we have found a fruitful collaboration
in image, spatial, temporal, and scientific information management
that has greatly benifited both organizations. Calflora works
under a agreement to share information and data resources with
DLP.